Category Archives: Smart People

Mark Cuban Comes Up With a Very Relevant Statistic

Mark Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks NBA franchise, is one smart dude.  He’s also a pain in the butt to the other NBA owners, but I think that’s more because he is willing to rock the boat and ask hard questions than because of his almost instant success reviving down-and-out franchise.

Mr. Cuban asked a question that I can’t believe has not been asked before: What is a team’s won-loss record in the second game when that game is played the day immediately following another game?  In other words what is a teams record in the second game of a back-to-back?  He recruited Elias Sports Bureau to help him come up with the answer, which is pretty interesting (W-L records of each NBA team over the last few years are at the bottom of the post).  He also is looking at the teams’ records in the last game they play when they play four games in five days, but he doesn’t have the W-L in the post.

My question is whether or not this is new information.  From the post I gather that it is, so my next question is how can all the people managing NBA teams not already know this?  I’d think it would behoove them to know this kind of stuff so that they can take steps to try and alleviate the problem.  From trying to negotiate better stadium deals to prevent the need for this kind of scheduling to figuring out ways to help the players deal with the situation when it arises you would think they would want this kind of data to back them up when they make requests/demands for the sake of the team (when negotiating with stadium owners) and the owners (when trying to justify expenditures on behalf of players who already make gobs of money).

I guess that’s what makes Mr. Cuban so smart; he asks the questions that no one else even thinks of.

The Tale of Target, Legos and the Stupid Smart Guy

There’s a guy who was making a pile of money selling Legos online.  Pretty smart.  He got his merchandise by visiting Target stores, switching barcodes from cheap Lego sets to more expensive Lego sets and then buying the more expensive set at the cheaper price.  The tag switching thing is pretty smart, but doing it only at Target stores was pretty dumb because the folks at Target noticed a pattern and one of their own store security people caught the guy while he was trying to buy 10 sets of the Star Wars Millenium Falcon set.  They found a bunch more in his car along with a laptop that had Target stores plotted out on a mapping software.  That’s dumb.

You can read all about it at Loose Wire.

Matt McAlister – Smart Person for Any Publisher Type to Read

I haven’t updated my "Smart People" section in a long time so here’s a good one to get it going again.  Matt McAlister writes some very interesting stuff about the evolving world of online content, and this latest piece is a fine example.

If you’re interested in publishing or the developing online world I strongly suggest that you subscribe to his feed.

Knowing Your Market

If you’re going to open a coffee shop that doesn’t serve coffee, then doing so right outside the campus of Brigham Young University is probably the best place possible.

This story is getting a lot of notice for the obvious irony, but you have to be impressed with the owner.  Christin Johnson is a 22-year old English major at BYU and she opened Vermillion Skies De-cafe and Lounge six months ago.

Read the article and I think you’ll agree that she’s pretty creative about her business, and definitely worthy of the "Smart People" tag.

My buddy Rob should definitely stop by and have himself a non-caffeinated Coconut Ice Mochas during Cranky Hour (5-6 p.m.).

Check out Billy the Blogging Poet

If you haven’t been there yet you should visit Billy the Blogging Poet, and I’m not saying this because he recently gave me a lot of love on the Blogsboro blog.

Billy’s a true renaissance man and I’ve enjoyed reading his blog since I started this whole blogging adventure.  I’m also quite embarassed that I left him off my list of Smart People until now.

Billy’s also the driving force behind:
Blogsboro.com
LaureatesKids.com

Steve Jobs’ Commencement Speech at Stanford

Dana Blankenhorn has a transcript (apparently not verbatim, but close) of Steve Jobs’ commencement speech at Stanford.  Dana says it’s the best commencement speech ever…and I haven’t heard enough of them to agree or disagree. I can tell you, though, that it is definitely worth reading.

He talks about dropping out of college because he was aimless and felt he was wasting his working class parents’ money.  Then he did an amazing thing: he dropped back into college.  He just started going to classes that interested him, sleeping on friends’ floors and collecting bottles to turn in for food money.  Here’s what he said:

Reed College at that time offered perhaps the best calligraphy
instruction in the country. Throughout the campus every poster, every
label on every drawer was beautifully hand-calligraphed. Because I had
dropped out and didn’t have to take the normal classes, I decided to
take a calligraphy class to learn how to do this. I learned about serif
and sans-serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between  different letter combinations, about what makes great typography great.
It was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science
can’t capture, and I found it fascinating.

None of this had even a hope of any practical application in my life. 

But ten years later when we were designing the first Macintosh  computer, it all came back to me, and we designed it all into the  Mac. It was the first computer with beautiful typography. If I had  never dropped in on that single course in college, the Mac would have  never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts, and 
since Windows just copied the Mac, it’s likely that no personal  computer would have them.

If I had never dropped out, I would have never dropped in on that  calligraphy class and personals computers might not have the  wonderful typography that they do.

Of course it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward when  I was in college, but it was very, very clear looking backwards 10  years later. Again, you can’t connect the dots looking forward. You  can only connect them looking backwards, so you have to trust that  the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in  something–your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever–because  believing that the dots will connect down the road will give you the  confidence to follow your heart, even when it leads you off the well-worn path, and that will make all the difference.

He then goes on to talk about two more major events in his life, being fired at Apple and being diagnosed with cancer.  Here is his take on death:

No one wants to die, even people who want to go to Heaven don’t want
to die to get there, and yet, death is the destination we all share. No
one has ever escaped it.

And that is as it should be, because death is very likely the  single best invention of life. It’s life’s change agent; it clears  out the old to make way for the new. right now, the new is you. But  someday, not too long from now, you will gradually become the old and  be cleared away. Sorry to be so dramatic, but it’s quite true. Your  time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t  be trapped by dogma, which is living with the results of other  people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out  your own inner voice, heart and intuition. They somehow already know 
what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.

Why I’ve Always Respected Engineering Students

There’s an engineering student somewhere who’s created a do-it-yourself air conditioner using a trash can, a fan, some tubing and ice water.  You can see it here.

This is another in a growing list of reasons why I’ve always respected engineering students.  Actually the list is for all non-English majors.  We EMs are basically a worthless lot unless you’re in desperate need for a font of worthless knowledge…then we’re it!

Secular Humanism

Dana Blankenhorn writes a long piece on secular humanism that touches on many topics of interest in America right now.  Intelligent design, the separation of church and state, science vs. belief, etc. As usual I don’t agree with some of what he says, do agree with much of it, and think alot because of it.

A couple of paragraphs really grabbed me.  Here’s the first:

Faith is meaningless if it is compelled. If a soup kitchen feeds you,
then demands you pray to its God in order to take that soup, is your
prayer really worth anything? If a school demands your child recite a
specific prayer, to a specific God, at a specific time, in a specific
way, where is the God in that? Where is the faith in that child?

This paragraph provoked a tangential thought process that helped me articulate my problem with evangelism. It is this:

If you need to tell me, repeatedly, why your religion (notice I said religion, not God) is so great then my first instinct is to look for its weakness.  On the other hand if while having lunch together I hear you talk about the wonderful experiences you’ve had while volunteering at your church’s soup kitchen, see your eyes light up when you talk about the great people you’ve met while building homeless shelters, sense the community you feel whenever you chaperone your church’s youth group trips, I see you as a representative of all that is good with your religion.  I may not join (do I really need to for you to have fulfilled your evangelistic mission?) but I will come to believe that your church is a true community of good, of doing what God put you, us, on Earth to do.

The next part of Dana’s post that grabbed me was this:

America is also a nation of 10,000 faiths, all actively practiced, all loudly proclaimed.

We have Bahai and Buddhist temples, Shiite, Sunni and Black Muslims.

We have Maronite and Roman Catholics, Russian and Greek Orthodox. We
have Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform Jewish temples. We have a
wealth of faiths invented right here – Mormons and Southern Baptists –
as well as churches that get by merely on their ministers’ brand name…

America is the most religious nation in the history of the planet.
We’re a Christian nation, but we are also a Buddhist one, and a Muslim
one, and a Hindu one. When God hears the prayers of America, he or she
hears dozens of languages, a great cacophony. And then there are the
atheists and agnostics who either don’t know God or don’t care.

All this is worth cherishing. All this is worth savoring. All this
is worth protecting. This is our legacy, it’s what makes us special.

My thought tangent here diverted to the damage that the exclusionary aspect of many religions is doing to our society.  If you’re not with us then you’re against us.

Those same people who stand there and proclaim the greatness of their religion also preach that their’s is the only way.  If I, or you, do not join them we will not be saved.  I will be excluded.  I am an outsider.

This kind of thinking is human in that almost all people surround themselves with people like themselves.  We fear people who are different. Unfortunately many leaders understand how to take advantage of this fear. They use this fear to manipulate us for their own ends, whether it be the furthering of their particular ideology or the gain of power and influence in the secular world.

As Dana points out, the true power of America is that we accept all faiths under our umbrella.  We recognize each individual’s right to believe in their own religion, or to not have a religion.  We are inclusive, not exclusive.   We have overcome our natural fear of "others", although it has never happened quickly (ask the Irish and Italian immigrants of the late 19th and early 20th century).

America is definitely a nation of economic haves and have nots, but it is also a nation that has led the way in offering personal liberty.  It is by nature an inclusive society.

My fear right now is of those leaders that would claim America for their particular faith.  America is NOT a Christian nation, nor a Muslim nation, nor a Hindu nation.  It is a nation that accepts all of these faiths and more.  It is a scaffold that supports all religions and none.

To close the loop let me say this:  I do not want to evangelize for America, for the same reason that I don’t want someone to evangelize their religion to me.  I want to lead my life so that I can be a representative of what is good about America.  I want my actions to speak for my belief.

Smart People

Has anyone else noticed that when writing your blog it is so much easier to link to stupid people, or at least people doing stupid things, and make fun of them than it is to identify smart people and write about why you think they are? I even created a category called "Stupid People." Maybe it’s just me giving into that age-old temptation to criticize others in order to feel better about myself. 

Well, it hit me like a brick today that I’ve been the beneficiary of many smart people’s wisdom over the years, but since I began setting up my RSS feeds a while back I think that I’ve probably accelerated that process 10-fold.  There are some truly brilliant people out there, and I’m constantly humbled by what they know and how much I have yet to learn.

So with this post I launch the "Smart People" category.  It is not a comprehensive list, and it is limited to those I can link to online, so it precludes many of the true geniuses I’ve known for a long time.  I also want to point out that I often disagree with many of the people I’ll be listing, but that’s okay because their convictions are informed by a true thought process that is exhibited consistently in their writing.

Today I begin with a list in no particular order.  Later I hope I’ll be able to tell you why I think they’re brilliant, but for now just take my word for it:

Dana Blankenhorn
Umair Haque
Rex Hammock
Patrick Eakes
Chewie (wish I knew her real name)
Ed Cone
John Robinson
Lex Alexander
David Hoggard

That’s a start.